Pubdate: Tue, 19 Apr 2005 Source: Decatur Daily Democrat (IN) Copyright: 2005 The Decatur Daily Democrat Contact: http://www.decaturdailydemocrat.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3284 Author: Brian Howey Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) LESSONS, FROM CRACK TO METH INDIANAPOLIS - Of the 15 new cases of child abuse The Villages deals with each day, eight are the result of a family engulfed by methamphetamine. It is a problem that shouldn't have taken Hoosiers by surprise, but it has. In 1998, there were 43 meth labs seized by Indiana State Police, compared to 430 for Missouri and 189 in Kansas. A year later, there were 178 lab seizures in Indiana (615 in Missouri, 511 in Kansas), 427 in 2000 (918 in Missouri, 702 in Kansas), 681 in 2001 (918 in Missouri, 849 in Kansas) and 800 in 2002. State police discovered 51 meth labs in Knox County from Jan. 1 to Sept. 30, 2004. In the face of that sinister trending, the U.S. Justice Department's Indiana Drug Threat Assessment Update in May 2002 noted, "Methamphetamine poses the second-greatest drug threat (to cocaine) to Indiana and abuse appears to be increasing." This comes in a state that had witnessed its greatest human catastrophe when crack cocaine came to Fort Wayne in 1985. It took seven years before it hit Indianapolis, where the city was unprepared for the record homicide rates, gang turf battles and swamped jails ... the very same symptoms that had occurred in Fort Wayne. Virtually no one compared notes on the Fort Wayne and Indianapolis experiences. Now Indiana jails and prisons are filling with meth addicts and dealers in rural counties and small towns. Did Indiana learn anything between its crack crisis and the meth tragedies engulfing Evansville, Vincennes, Terre Haute and Crawfordsville? "Critically, I'd suggest we didn't learn a whole lot," Department of Child Services Director James Payne explained. He described a conversation with a Northern Indiana legislator recently. "I asked him about meth in his area," Payne said. "And he said, 'What's that?' We should have been looking at other states such as Iowa, Kansas and Missouri." It is a problem that is steadily spreading from western Indiana to east, from south to north. Payne said Indiana is just now developing protocols such as whether kids taken from meth labs "be allowed to leave with their clothes, or their teddy bears." Other states, he said are leveling homes where meth is produced, excavating three feet of soil under the foundation, and taking the debris to toxic waste dumps. "And what I saw is that when Indiana legislators are writing legislation, they were doing so without asking 'What are other states doing?'" Payne said. Last Tuesday, Gov. Mitch Daniels stepped in to address the festering wound. He warned reporters that he would order to shoot anyone who asked about daylight-saving time. It was a joke, but it shed light on the priorities of state. Councils and commissioners in places such as Vigo and Knox counties anxiously awaited his move. In Vigo County, laws already were passed to limit the sale of over-the-counter drugs used to make meth. Daniels pulled in a wide variety of resources idle during the meth crisis. His plan called for the utilization of Indiana's colleges and universities to help reduce the backlog of drug cases at state police drug-testing laboratories while preparing Indiana students in the forensic science field. He ordered the development of a "real time" reporting database between prosecutors and drug-testing labs, along with standardized procedures for removing and protecting children exposed to meth production. And Daniels called for a stricter version of a methamphetamine bill that would restrict access to ephedrine and pseudoephedrine, two products used in the production of meth, and a pilot program at the Miami Correctional Facility that is providing specialized treatment to help rehabilitate meth users and lower repeat offender rates. "Methamphetamine abuse in Indiana has no boundaries. Its effects are devastating to our families and children, our schools, neighborhoods and the environment," Daniels said. "There is no overstating the damage this drug is inflicting to Indiana, and there is no step we can take that is too strong to combat this drug." This will help expedite the process," said Knox County Sheriff Steve Luce told the Vincennes Sun-Commercial. "It's ruined a lot of lives." I called crack cocaine the "greatest human catastrophe in Indiana history." Meth is joining that pantheon of horror. When 10-year-old Katlyn Collman was murdered in January after witnessing a Crothersville meth lab, Hoosiers finally had a tragic poster child. Daniels noted the 8,500 backlogged cases and ordered a pilot program to put university faculty and students to work in Indiana State Police labs, which have been choked with activity. And there was the announcement of the Clean Lifestyle is Freedom Forever (CLIFF) program at the Miami Correctional Facility, an idea proposed by Daniels that took shape within 30 days. Hoosiers saw their new governor conversing with more than a dozen inmates at MCF. It was an impressive pulling together of resources and articulation of policy across a broad spectrum of state assets and generations. And it came at the directive of a governor who, as a candidate, complained that Hoosier leaders had been "thrashing around the same rut" while seemingly intractable problems mounted. Compared to methamphetamine, the importance of issues like daylight-saving time and a Colts stadium pales. * Howey is publisher of The Howey Political Report, the weekly briefing on Indiana politics. See www.howeypolitics.com. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom